Living donor liver transplantation for pediatric and adult recipients

被引:12
作者
Kulkarni, S
Malagò, M
Cronin, DC
机构
[1] Yale Univ, Sch Med, Sect Organ Transplantat & Immunol, New Haven, CT 06520 USA
[2] Univ Hosp Essen, Dept Gen Surg & Transplantat, Essen, Germany
来源
NATURE CLINICAL PRACTICE GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY | 2006年 / 3卷 / 03期
关键词
living donor; liver transplantation; pediatric liver transplantation; segmental liver transplantation;
D O I
10.1038/ncpgasthep0437
中图分类号
R57 [消化系及腹部疾病];
学科分类号
摘要
Living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) was initially developed to provide suitable liver grafts for pediatric patients with end-stage liver disease. This innovation was remarkable for the prospective nature of its development and the public discussions that resolved the ethical dilemma of removing a portion of a liver from a healthy donor for the benefit of another person. Since its inception, this procedure has been uniformly adopted by most pediatric transplant centers, with excellent results. Unfortunately, liver grafts obtained from this procedure did not provide sufficient hepatocyte mass for use in adult recipients. An adult donor procedure was, therefore, developed to provide larger liver grafts, which were derived from the right lobe of the liver. Much of the driving force for adult-to-adult LDLT has been in countries that lack the health-care infrastructure for obtaining deceased donors or have cultural objections to deceased donor transplantation. In developed countries, the initial growth of adult-to-adult LDLT has been tempered by notable donor complications, including death, but it continues to have an important role in providing life-saving liver grafts for recipients who are unable to compete for deceased donor grafts in the current organ-allocation system.
引用
收藏
页码:149 / 157
页数:9
相关论文
共 53 条
[1]   Living donor liver transplantation: present and future [J].
Belghiti, J ;
Durand, F .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 2000, 87 (11) :1441-1443
[2]  
BISMUTH H, 1984, SURGERY, V95, P367
[3]   LIVER-TRANSPLANTATION IN CHILDREN FROM LIVING RELATED DONORS - SURGICAL TECHNIQUES AND RESULTS [J].
BROELSCH, CE ;
WHITINGTON, PF ;
EMOND, JC ;
HEFFRON, TG ;
THISTLETHWAITE, JR ;
STEVENS, L ;
PIPER, J ;
WHITINGTON, SH ;
LICHTOR, JL .
ANNALS OF SURGERY, 1991, 214 (04) :428-439
[4]  
BROELSCH CE, 1984, LAGENBECKS ARCH CH S, V362, P105
[5]   One hundred thirty-two consecutive pediatric liver transplants without hospital mortality - Lessons learned and outlook for the future [J].
Broering, DC ;
Kim, JS ;
Mueller, T ;
Fischer, L ;
Ganschow, R ;
Bicak, T ;
Mueller, L ;
Hillert, C ;
Wilms, C ;
Hinrichs, B ;
Helmke, K ;
Pothmann, W ;
Burdelski, M ;
Rogiers, X .
ANNALS OF SURGERY, 2004, 240 (06) :1002-1012
[6]   A survey of liver transplantation from living adult donors in the United States [J].
Brown, RS ;
Russo, MW ;
Lai, M ;
Shiffman, ML ;
Richardson, MC ;
Everhart, JE ;
Hoofnagle, JH .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2003, 348 (09) :818-825
[7]   Advances in pediatric liver transplantation: Continuous monitoring of portal venous and hepatic artery flow with an implantable Doppler probe [J].
Cronin, DC ;
Schechter, L ;
Lohman, RF ;
Limsrichamrern, S ;
Winans, CG ;
Gerzenshtein, J ;
Millis, JM .
TRANSPLANTATION, 2002, 74 (06) :887-890
[8]   Transplantation of liver grafts from living donors into adults - Too much, too soon. [J].
Cronin, DC ;
Millis, JM ;
Siegler, M .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2001, 344 (21) :1633-1637
[9]   Ethics and rationale of living-donor liver transplantation in Asia [J].
de Villa, VH ;
Lo, CM ;
Chen, CL .
TRANSPLANTATION, 2003, 75 (03) :S2-S5
[10]   Biliary anastomotic complications in 400 living related liver transplantations [J].
Egawa, H ;
Inomata, Y ;
Uemoto, S ;
Asonuma, K ;
Kiuchi, T ;
Fujita, S ;
Hayashi, M ;
Matamoros, MA ;
Itou, K ;
Tanaka, K .
WORLD JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 2001, 25 (10) :1300-1307